Publications by authors named "Yuan Ping Chao"

Background: Taiwan enacted the Hospice Palliative Care Act in 2000 and the Patient Autonomy Act in 2016. However, medical education has emphasized palliative care skills over ethical and legal integration. This study developed a curriculum for pre-clinical students, focusing on applying these issues in end of life care.

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Background Diagnosing osteoporosis is challenging due to its often asymptomatic presentation, which highlights the importance of providing screening for high-risk populations. Purpose To evaluate the effectiveness of dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) screening in high-risk patients with osteoporosis identified by an artificial intelligence (AI) model using chest radiographs. Materials and Methods This randomized controlled trial conducted at an academic medical center included participants 40 years of age or older who had undergone chest radiography between January and December 2022 without a history of DXA examination.

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Purpose: Foot drop still occurs in clinical practice, including in our case. Treatments for foot drop vary based on its etiology and severity of symptoms. Hence, in intractable foot drop cases, an invasive surgical intervention is needed.

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Background: Certain variables reportedly are associated with a change in left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) in heart failure (HF) with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF). However, literature describing the association between the recovery potential of LVEF and parameters of ventricular remodeling in echocardiography remains sparse.

Methods: We recruited 2,148 HF patients with LVEF < 35%.

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Article Synopsis
  • Age-related decline in muscle mass and function is a significant concern for older adults, yet its progression and determinants are poorly understood.
  • A study involving 568 community-dwelling adults aged 65 and over tracked changes in muscle health from 2015 to 2021, identifying three stages: healthy, dynapenia (low function), presarcopenia (low mass), and sarcopenia (both low mass and function).
  • Findings revealed that age and fat-to-muscle ratio increased the risk of transitioning to dynapenia, while serum albumin levels decreased that risk; individuals with multiple risk factors had significantly higher transition risks.
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Frailty is a commonly occurring geriatric condition that increases the risk of adverse health outcomes. The factors and predictors behind frailty are not yet well understood. A better understanding of these factors can enable prevention of frailty in elderly patients.

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Objective: Increasing evidence supports sarcopenia as an important parameter for predicting cardiometabolic risks. The objective of this study was to investigate the relationship between muscle mass, muscle strength, and physical performance, and cardiovascular risk among older community-dwelling adults.

Design: The associations between dynapenia, sarcopenia, and Framingham risk score (FRS) were estimated by multivariate regression models.

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The most important issue for the clinical application of sarcopenic obesity (SO) is the lack of a consensus definition. The aim of the present study was to determine the best measurement for SO by estimating the association between various definitions and the risk of falls and metabolic syndrome (MS). We studied a community of 765 adults aged 65 years and older in 2015-2017.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the relationship between muscle mass, muscle function, and fat composition in elderly adults, aiming to understand how these factors contribute to sarcopenia and disability.
  • Researchers enrolled 295 seniors, assessing hand grip strength, gait speed, and body composition using a bioelectrical impedance analyzer.
  • Findings reveal that presarcopenia individuals had lower fat indexes than those with sarcopenia, and negative correlations were found between muscle function (gait speed for men, grip strength for women) and fat indexes, indicating that higher body-fat percentage and fat-to-muscle ratio relate to reduced physical performance.
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Background: Osteoporosis is an underdiagnosed disease and is lack of convenient and cost-efficient screening tool. We undertook a study to determine whether mid-arm muscle circumference (MAMC) was associated with osteoporosis.

Design: Data were retrieved from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) III participants (aged 40-90 years).

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Background: Anthropometric parameters have been widely applied in evaluating muscle mass, insulin resistance (IR), and cardiometabolic diseases. Arm circumference (AC) and calf circumference (CC) are used as informative markers for sarcopenia. However, few studies concern the correlation between AC, CC and IR.

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Gamma gap is the difference in total serum proteins and albumin and an elevated gamma gap is related to infections, malignancy, and rheumatic diseases. An elevated gamma gap is also associated with higher mortality due to the correlation with inflammatory status. The study aimed to utilize mid-arm muscle circumference (MAMC) to assist in predicting all-cause mortality, cancer mortality, and cardiovascular mortality in people with elevated gamma gaps.

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The homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) was used to measure the degree of insulin resistance (IR). Previous literature revealed that mid-arm muscle circumference (MAMC) is one of the anthropometric indicators for nutritional status and the relationship between MAMC and HOMA-IR remains uncertain in the obese and non-obese elderly individuals. The present study included 5,607 participants aged between 60 to 84 years old, using data from the 1999 to 2006 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES).

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